Biron, quick burst in third guide Flyers past Devils

Scottie Upshall and Joffrey Lupul scored 37 seconds apart midway
through the third period and Martin Biron made 22 saves as the
Flyers posted a 3-0 victory over the New Jersey Devils on
Friday, helping them clinch a postseason berth.

R.J. Umberger also scored for Philadelphia (41-29-11), which
secured the playoff spot in the Eastern Conference by virtue of
its triumph and Carolina's loss to Florida.

"We played close to a perfect game," Flyers All-Star center Mike
Richards said. "We didn't give them a lot of opportunities,
and to have Florida help us out like that is huge. This is
exciting."

"It feels great. It feels unbelievable," Philadelphia coach
John Stevens said. "We left it to the very end, but to see the
joy on the faces of these guys is great. We have had some ups
and downs, but what a great accomplishment for this group."

Advancing to the postseason is no small accomplishment for the
Flyers, who posted a league-low 56 points in 2006-07 after
notching 101 the previous campaign.

"We had a big drop-off from season to season. They were saying
that it was one of the biggest in history," said Biron, who was
acquired from Buffalo at last season's trade deadline. "We knew
that to get to the playoffs, we needed to have one of the
biggest upgrades in terms of points.

"This is something that we all can be happy about, for everybody
in the franchise to know that we've turned it around and we've
done what we were supposed to do."

Martin Brodeur stopped 33 shots for the Devils (45-29-7), who
had won three in a row overall and six straight meetings with
the Flyers.

"The way we played the whole game is not the way the coaches or
we want to play," Brodeur said. "(The Flyers) came in as a team
that was desperate and they outplayed us. They had a lot of
incentive and maybe not as much for us, and it showed big time."

"Outside of our goaltender, we had a lot of bad players
tonight," New Jersey coach Brent Sutter said. "There was no
passion in their performance at all. It was a total lack of
commitment tonight - bottom line. It if wasn't for Marty, it
might have been 10-0. What more do you have to say beyond
that?"

Umberger opened the scoring at 5:44 of the first period with his
13th goal of the season.

After Vaclav Prospal's shot was deflected into the right corner,
Umberger chased down the puck and backhanded it to the front of
the net. With Scott Hartnell waiting for the pass, New Jersey
defenseman Mike Mottau inadvertently put it past Brodeur for a
1-0 lead.

"I had decent position on (Hartnell) and I tried to clear (the
puck)," Mottau said. "I just put it right past Marty. I just
swiped at the puck and it went right in the net."

"It was one of those plays that happens so quick," Umberger
said. "We just wanted to keep the pressure on, and to get that
early goal was nice. We came out flying and capitalized on our
chances."

The goal held until midway through the third, when Philadelphia
took firm control in quick fashion.

Jeff Carter gathered the puck off the right wing boards and
skated below the end line before dishing to Upshall, who
one-timed it past Brodeur from the slot with 8:44 remaining for
a 2-0 advantage.

"I thought to come out of (the first) period 1-0 was big for us,
and we were able to carry that," Stevens said. "Sometimes
there is a letdown, and I thought the Devils would come a little
harder in the second period. Scottie Upshall comes back in the
lineup and gets a huge goal for us. He played with all kinds
of energy."

Moments later, Richards carried down the left wing before
feeding Lupul for an easy tap-in from the doorstep for his 20th
goal of the season and a three-goal bulge.

"It was an emotional game with a playoff atmosphere out there,"
Richards said. "We were in their face and we got everything
deep. We got some ugly goals and just kind of played their
style of game, and we had some success doing that."

Sutter replaced Brodeur with Kevin Weekes after Lupul's goal, a
move that made sense to the three-time Vezina Trophy winner.

"It was common sense for my coach to pull me out of there,"
Brodeur said. "It happens, and it will happen again. I played
as well as I could to keep the team in there. It was just one
of those things."

Biron turned aside six shots in each of the first two periods
and 10 more in the third en route to his fourth shutout of the
season and 22nd career.

Biron elected to credit the play of his teammates for blanking
the Devils.

"We played hard in front of the net and we played with a lot of
composure," he said. "Instead of getting rid of the puck and
not knowing where it was going, we hung on to it and we made the
play with confidence. That was the big difference."

With the loss, New Jersey must avoid a regulation loss to the
New York Rangers on Sunday in order to clinch fourth place in
the East and home-ice advantage in the conference quarterfinals.
The Devils could have secured that position with a win over the
Flyers.

"We didn't come out like a team that was battling for home ice,"
New Jersey's Zach Parise said. "We just came out like a team
that was content to be in the playoffs. We can't have that at
this time of the year. We have to play a lot better on Sunday."